The newly designed 312,000-sf Loyola University Campus in Seville, Spain has become the world’s first integrated campus to receive LEED Platinum, the highest environmental rating by the U.S. Green Building Council. The multipurpose facility, which also aims to be the first ‘5G Campus’ in the world, was designed to accommodate numerous aspects of learning and university life.
The $29 million project places all of the classrooms, laboratories, and common spaces (including the cafeteria and auditorium), which totals 265,000-sf, in a single, optimized building. The sports building, library, lockers, access building, and chapel, which totals over 47,000-sf of additional space, complete the complex.
Given Seville’s Mediterranean climate, where high temperatures are often the norm, special attention was paid to controlling sunlight. “The project makes use of the lessons learned in T2 at Heathrow Airport in the U.K., and incorporates textile technology – the design of an external element, ‘the candle,’ which controls the light that penetrates the buildings,” said Luis Vidal, President and Founding Partner at luis vidal + architects, in a release. “The campus also consists of a sequence of open and closed spaces, designed to provide self-shading.”
See also: Students aren’t the only ones who have returned to Austin College in Texas
Winter/summer plazas change with the seasons to provide comfortable outdoor space for students. During summer these plazas benefit from the sun shading of the buildings, generating spaces sheltered from the Western sunlight. In addition, the presence of water cools down the temperature and creates a microclimate of a certain comfort. During winter plazas heat up with sunlight, in its lowest angles of incidence and, they are protected from the prevailing winds.
The campus’ roof, facades, and windows were designed to minimize sizable energy losses. Photovoltaic panels were also installed to reduce the net-energy consumption of the building. A water recovery system was also incorporated. More than 20% of the building materials come from previous uses, and more than 30% of the materials were locally extracted from the surrounding area.
Project construction was wrapped in 17 months.
Related Stories
University Buildings | Apr 9, 2019
17-story Data Sciences building to rise on Boston University campus
KPMB Architects is designing the project.
University Buildings | Apr 2, 2019
Denning House completes at Stanford University
Ennead Architects designed the building.
University Buildings | Mar 28, 2019
Tulane University’s new student center combines the old and the new
StudioWTA designed the building.
University Buildings | Mar 27, 2019
Veterans Resource Center at Cypress College breaks ground
Sundt Construction is building the project.
University Buildings | Mar 26, 2019
The Bill & Melinda Gates Center for Computer Science & Engineering opens on the University of Washington campus
LMN Architects designed the facility.
Mixed-Use | Feb 21, 2019
An R&D-oriented innovation district is taking shape in the heart of Durham, N.C.
Its buildout has included converting old tobacco warehouses into offices and labs.
University Buildings | Feb 1, 2019
University of Miami design/build program receives new immersive-learning facility
Professor Rocco Ceo designed the studio space.
University Buildings | Jan 29, 2019
The Colorado School of Mines CoorsTek Center opens
Bohlin Cywinski Jackson designed the building.
University Buildings | Dec 17, 2018
SCUP and University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing release study results on lactation policy and facilities in U.S. higher education
There is a wide variability between how campuses accommodate the needs of breastfeeding mothers.
University Buildings | Dec 12, 2018
New Life Science Building at University of Washington designed for the next generation of research and teaching
Perkins+Will designed the facility.